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VaderTibi Et Igni

★★★☆ This album is brutal like an industrial accident. Something like a cross between Decapitated and Exodus, the thrashy death metal on here is unshy, well-produced, and above all punishing. For me, this rivals Vader’s last album “Welcome To The Morbid Reich” (if anything, that album has slightly more memorable moments, but the overall effect is better on “Tibi Et Igni.”)

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EnablerLa Fin Absolue Du Monde

★★★☆ I’m not sure I’m in love with the lo-fi production ethic going on with this album. On the other hand, a case could be made that the metal herein is so fucking intense that mere mortals wouldn’t be able to cope otherwise. This is Enabler’s most ambitious release to date, a pyroclastic flow of hardcore violence that only the most jaded can resist.

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CrowbarSymmetry in Black

★★★☆ This is in many ways just another Crowbar album… but at the same time it’s cleaner, darker, heavier, sludgier, and more expansive. There’s a later-album vibe to a lot of the material here (obvs), but all the same this whole album is a smack in the ass (and you know I mean that in the nicest way possible).

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Misery IndexThe Killing Gods

★★★☆ This album both suffers and benefits from feeling like a slightly higher brow Black Dahlia Murder. It’s refreshing and rare to hear the refinement in this brand of death metal, but it also softens the cutting edge a wee bit. Still, this is a frenetic and powerful 43 minutes, and a joy to hear from cover to cover.

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MiasmalCursed Redeemer

★★★☆ This album sits somewhere between Kurt Ballou’s wall of noise, Entombed’s “Wolverine Blues,” and Motörhead’s “No Remorse.” It occupies that space restlessly, but entertainingly. One of the more believably muscular, menacing, and vitriolic releases of 2014. A definite must-listen.

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NoneuclidMetatheosis

★★★☆ There’s a lot to admire on this album, certainly one of the most surprising and unstraightforward First Listens of the year. Equal parts Voivod, Gorguts, and Thought Industry, with hints of Devin Townsend, Opeth, Hagman, and King Crimson. You should hear it, if for no other reason that it’ll confuse you.

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Devil You KnowThe Beauty of Destruction

★★★☆ This isn’t just a simple amalgam of styles that you tend to get with metal supergroups, but an interesting bit of exploration away from their metalcore and thrashy origins. When it works, anyway; sometimes the experiments fall flat. And overall there’s a haunting similarity to the Frankenstein quality I remember hearing on many of the Roadrunner United album.